
Tacoma’s rain has a way of threading itself through memory. It slicks the streets, halos the porch light, beads on the sash windows until each pane looks like it’s wearing a veil. That evening, it also made time honest. The second hand on the kitchen clock stuttered—once, twice—as if the house needed one more breath before deciding what came next in the United States of tidy lawns and messy family truths.
I laid the table the way peace is prepared in America’s ordinary homes: irons smoothed the cloth in the morning; forks aligned; the good plates with a faint lattice of age; a roast chicken resting like a promise; potatoes, green beans; salt in a little ramekin; pepper in the grinder with the handle Victor had repaired years ago with epoxy and patience. If a house can remember, ours remembers this ritual—how a meal can braid people together long enough to try again.
